219 research outputs found
Star Formation in Disk Galaxies. II. The Effect of Star Formation and Photoelectric Heating on the Formation and Evolution of Giant Molecular Clouds
We investigate the effect of star formation and diffuse photoelectric heating
on the properties of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) formed in high resolution
(~< 10 pc) global (~ 20 kpc) simulations of isolated Milky Way-type galaxy
disks. The clouds are formed through gravitational fragmentation and structures
with densities n_H>=100cm^-3 are identified as GMCs. Between 1000-1500 clouds
are created in the simulations with masses M > 10^5 Msolar and 180-240 with
masses M > 10^6 Msolar in agreement with estimates of the Milky Way's
population. We find that the effect of photoelectric heating is to suppress the
fragmentation of the ISM, resulting in a filamentary structure in the warm gas
surrounding clouds. This environment suppresses the formation of a retrograde
rotating cloud population, with 88% of the clouds rotating prograde with
respect to the galaxy after 300 Myr. The diffuse heating also reduces the
initial star formation rate, slowing the conversation of gas into stars. We
therefore conclude that the interstellar environment plays an important role in
the GMCs evolution. Our clouds live between 0-20 Myr with a high infant
mortality (t' < 3 Myr) due to cloud mergers and star formation. Other
properties, including distributions of mass, size and surface density agree
well with observations. Collisions between our clouds are common, occurring at
a rate of ~1/4 of the orbital period. It is not clear whether such collisions
trigger or suppress star formation at our current resolution. Our star
formation rate is a factor of 10 higher than observations in local galaxies.
This is likely due to the absence of localized feedback in our models.Comment: 25 pages. 18 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Genetic dissection of MHC-associated susceptibility to Lepeophtheirus salmonis in Atlantic salmon
Background: Genetic variation has been shown to play a significant role in determining susceptibility to the salmon louse, Lepeophtheirus salmonis. However, the mechanisms involved in differential response to infection remain poorly understood. Recent findings in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) have provided evidence for a potential link between marker variation at the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and differences in lice abundance among infected siblings, suggesting that MHC genes can modulate susceptibility to the parasite. In this study, we used quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis to test the effect of genomic regions linked to MHC class I and II on linkage groups (LG) 15 and 6, respectively. Results: Significant QTL effects were detected on both LG 6 and LG 15 in sire-based analysis but the QTL regions remained unresolved due to a lack of recombination between markers. In dam-based analysis, a significant QTL was identified on LG 6, which accounted for 12.9% of within-family variance in lice abundance. However, the QTL was located at the opposite end of DAA, with no significant overlap with the MHC class II region. Interestingly, QTL modelling also revealed evidence of sex-linked differences in lice abundance, indicating that males and females may have different susceptibility to infection. Conclusion: Overall, QTL analysis provided relatively weak support for a proximal effect of classical MHC regions on lice abundance, which can partly be explained by linkage to other genes controlling susceptibility to L. salmonis on the same chromosom
Representations of Attachment and THE TWILIGHT SAGA 1 Do Representations of Attachment to Romantic Partners in Emerging Adulthood Influence Attitudes about and Perceptions of The Twilight Saga?
Abstract Given the predominant themes of love and obsession in The Twilight Saga, an online survey was completed by 243 females from three different locations assessing both expertise/exposure to the books and/or movies and their reactions to the characters. Representation of real-life attachment to romantic partners was also assessed via The Experiences in Close Relationship Inventory-Revised (Fraley, Waller, & Brennan, 2000). Variables indicating higher levels of expertise were consistently related to higher levels of attachment Anxiety, but not attachment Avoidance, although participants with lower levels of both Anxiety and Avoidance reported being influenced by the characters in similar ways
Star Formation in Disk Galaxies. I. Formation and Evolution of Giant Molecular Clouds via Gravitational Instability and Cloud Collisions
We investigate the formation and evolution of giant molecular clouds (GMCs)
in a Milky-Way-like disk galaxy with a flat rotation curve. We perform a series
of 3D adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) numerical simulations that follow both the
global evolution on scales of ~20kpc and resolve down to scales ~<10pc with a
multiphase atomic interstellar medium (ISM). In this first study, we omit star
formation and feedback, and focus on the processes of gravitational instability
and cloud collisions and interactions. We define clouds as regions with
n_H>=100cm^-3 and track the evolution of individual clouds as they orbit
through the galaxy from their birth to their eventual destruction via merger or
via destructive collision with another cloud. After ~140Myr a large fraction of
the gas in the disk has fragmented into clouds with masses ~10^6 Msun and a
mass spectrum similar to that of Galactic GMCs. The disk settles into a quasi
steady state in which gravitational scattering of clouds keeps the disk near
the threshold of global gravitational instability. The cloud collision time is
found to be a small fraction, ~1/5, of the orbital time, and this is an
efficient mechanism to inject turbulence into the clouds. This helps to keep
clouds only moderately gravitationally bound, with virial parameters of order
unity. Many other observed GMC properties, such as mass surface density,
angular momentum, velocity dispersion, and vertical distribution, can be
accounted for in this simple model with no stellar feedback.Comment: 21 pages ApJ format, including 16 figures, accepted to Ap
No moderating effect of 5-HTTLPR on associations between antenatal anxiety and infant behavior.
OBJECTIVE: Maternal antenatal anxiety is associated with an increased risk of behavioral disturbances in offspring. Recent work has suggested that the effect of maternal antenatal anxiety on infant temperament at 6 months is moderated by the serotonin transporter polymorphism 5-HTTLPR, with carriers of the short allele more susceptible to the adverse behavioral outcomes of maternal antenatal anxiety. These findings, however, are yet to be replicated and extended beyond infancy. The aim of the current study was to assess this same potential moderator (5-HTTLPR) in a large population-based cohort study, and to determine whether or not the effects persist into childhood and early adolescence. METHOD: Data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Children and Parents (ALSPAC) cohort (N = 3,946) were used to assess whether the 5-HTTLPR genotype moderated the association between self-reported maternal antenatal anxiety (Crown Crisp Index) in pregnancy, and child temperament at 6 months (Infant Temperament Questionnaire), and also later behavioral and emotional problems on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire from age 4 to 13 years. RESULTS: We found no evidence to suggest that the 5-HTTLPR polymorphism moderated the effects of maternal antenatal anxiety on infant temperament at 6 months or infant behavioral and emotional problems from childhood through to adolescence. CONCLUSION: Our results, based on a large prospective community sample that assessed children from infancy to early adolescence, provide a thorough test of, but no evidence for, a genetic moderation of the effects of maternal antenatal anxiety by 5-HTTLPR
Sankey diagrams can clarify 'evidence attrition': A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effectiveness of rapid diagnostic tests for antimicrobial resistance.
OBJECTIVES: To demonstrate, using the example of a new systematic review of rapid diagnostic tests, how Sankey diagrams, alongside the PRISMA guidelines, can (i) facilitate reporting of the quality of the evidence base and (ii) help assess evidence syntheses when studies use heterogeneous outcomes. METHODS: Systematic review and meta-analysis of experimental and observational studies which included at least one prescribing or clinical outcome of RDTs in hospital in-patients. Sub-group analysis was used to assess heterogeneity in summary effect estimates. A Sankey diagram was then used to show the pattern and quality of evidence on RDT outcomes. RESULTS: 57 studies from 14 countries were included. The introduction of RDTs did not significantly reduce in-hospital mortality (RR 0.83, 95% CI 0.60 - 1.15) or length of stay (weighted mean differenceΒ =Β -0.36, 95% CI -1.67 to 0.96). There was high heterogeneity in outcomes. CONCLUSION: There is no clear evidence that the routine use of RDTs for bacterial identification and antibiotic susceptibility testing improves clinical outcomes in hospital in-patients. Sankey diagrams may be a useful further way succinctly to present the pattern and quality of evidence in systematic reviews, especially when it is heterogeneous and not easily amenable to meta-analysis
Left in the cold? Evolutionary origin of Laternula elliptica a keystone bivalve species of Antarctic benthos
The large, burrowing bivalve Laternula elliptica is an abundant component of shallow-water soft-substrate communities around Antarctica but its congeners are temperate and tropical in distribution and their phylogenetic relationships are obscure. A new molecular analysis of Laternulidae species shows that there are two distinct clades, one of Exolaternula species, E. spengleri and E. liautaudi, possessing a ligamental lithodesma and a larger clade of species lacking the lithodesma. Of the latter, Laternula elliptica is a sister taxon to temperate and tropical species, including those that live around the coasts of Australia from Tasmania to Darwin. It is suggested that L. elliptica was left isolated around Antarctica following the opening of the Tasman Gateway and initiation of the Circum-Antarctic Current as Australia drifted northwards following the final breakup of Gondwana. A further scenario is that as Australia moved closer to Asia, species spread into tropical habitats and more widely to the Red Sea and Japan. Exolaternula species have a likely Tethyan origin and the present-day range is from the Arabian Gulf, around southern Asia and as far north as southern Russia
Binge-Like Alcohol Exposure During Adolescence Disrupts Dopaminergic Neurotransmission in the Adult Prelimbic Cortex
Repeated binge-like exposure to alcohol during adolescence has been reported to perturb prefrontal cortical development, yet the mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown. Here we report that adolescent intermittent ethanol exposure induces cellular and dopaminergic abnormalities in the adult prelimbic cortex (PrL-C). Exposing rats to alcohol during early-mid adolescence (PD28β42) increased the density of long/thin dendritic spines of layer 5 pyramidal neurons in the adult PrL-C. Interestingly, although AIE exposure did not alter the expression of glutamatergic proteins in the adult PrL-C, there was a pronounced reduction in dopamine (DA) D1 receptor modulation of both intrinsic firing and evoked NMDA currents in pyramidal cells, whereas D2 receptor function was unaltered. Recordings from fast-spiking interneurons also revealed that AIE reduced intrinsic excitability, glutamatergic signaling, and D1 receptor modulation of these cells. Analysis of PrL-C tissue of AIE-exposed rats further revealed persistent changes in the expression of DA-related proteins, including reductions in the expression of tyrosine hydroxylase and catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT). AIE exposure was associated with hypermethylation of the COMT promoter at a conserved CpG site in exon II. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that AIE exposure disrupts DA and GABAergic transmission in the adult medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). As DA and GABA work in concert to shape and synchronize neuronal ensembles in the PFC, these alterations could contribute to deficits in behavioral control and decision-making in adults who abused alcohol during adolescence
Moderate threat causes longer lasting disruption to processing in anxious individuals
Anxiety is associated with increased attentional capture by threat. Previous studies have used simultaneous or briefly separated (<1 s) presentation of threat distractors and target stimuli. Here, we tested the hypothesis that high trait anxious participants would show a longer time window within which distractors cause disruption to subsequent task processing, and that this would particularly be observed for stimuli of moderate or ambiguous threat value. A novel temporally separated emotional distractor task was used. Face or house distractors were presented for 250 ms at short (βΌ1.6 s) or long (βΌ3 s) intervals prior to a letter string comprising Xs or Ns. Trait anxiety was associated with slowed identification of letter strings presented at long intervals after face distractors with part surprise/part fear expressions. In other words, these distractors had an impact on high anxious individuals' speed of target identification seconds after their offset. This was associated with increased activity in the fusiform gyrus and amygdala and reduced dorsal anterior cingulate recruitment. This pattern of activity may reflect impoverished recruitment of reactive control mechanisms to damp down stimulus-specific processing in subcortical and higher visual regions. These findings have implications for understanding how threat-related attentional biases in anxiety may lead to dysfunction in everyday settings where stimuli of moderate, potentially ambiguous, threat value such as those used here are fairly common, and where attentional disruption lasting several seconds may have a profound impact
Working in disadvantaged communities: What additional competencies do we need?
Background: Residents of socioeconomically disadvantaged locations are more likely to have poor health than residents of socioeconomically advantaged locations and this has been comprehensively mapped in Australian cities. These inequalities present a challenge for the public health workers based in or responsible for improving the health of people living in disadvantaged localities. The purpose of this study was to develop a generic workforce needs assessment tool and to use it to identify the competencies needed by the public health workforce to work effectively in disadvantaged communities.
Methods: A two-step mixed method process was used to identify the workforce needs. In step 1 a generic workforce needs assessment tool was developed and applied in three NSW Area Health Services using focus groups, key stakeholder interviews and a staff survey. In step 2 the findings of this needs assessment process were mapped against the existing National Health Training Package (HLT07) competencies, gaps were identified, additional competencies described and modules of training developed to fill identified gaps.
Results: There was a high level of agreement among the AHS staff on the nature of the problems to be addressed but less confidence indentifying the work to be done. Processes for needs assessments, community consultations and adapting
mainstream programs to local needs were frequently mentioned as points of intervention. Recruiting and retaining experienced staff to work in these communities and ensuring their safety were major concerns. Workforce skill development needs were seen in two ways: higher order planning/epidemiological skills and more effective working relationships with communities and other sectors. Organisational barriers to effective practice were high levels of annual compulsory training, balancing state and national priorities with local needs and giving equal attention to the population groups that are easy to reach and to those that are difficult to engage. A number of additional competency areas were identified and three training modules developed.
Conclusion: The generic workforce needs assessment tool was easy to use and interpret. It appears that the public health workforce involved in this study has a high level of understanding of the relationship between the social determinants and health. However there is a skill gap in identifying and undertaking effective intervention
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